Baltimore Sun Sunday

UK firms to make amends for slavery

Lloyd’s, Greene King acknowledg­e ties to appalling history

- By Mark Landler

LONDON — Britain’s uneasy confrontat­ion with its racist history moved from statues in town squares to corporate boardrooms this month, as two prominent British firms, Lloyd’s of London and Greene King, announced they would make amends for their involvemen­t in the slave trade in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Lloyd’s, the insurance giant, and Greene King, which owns pubs and breweries, have been forced to answer for sinister chapters in their past, as part of an unsparing focus on racism brought on by the Black Lives Matter protests against the killing of George Floyd, a black man, by police in Minneapoli­s last month.

Researcher­s at University College London documented how several important early figures in both firms had enslaved hundreds and were compensate­d for their loss after slavery was abolished in the British Empire in 1833.

Lloyd’s and Greene King each said they would invest in recruiting more black, Asian and other minority employees and provide financial support to charities that promote diversity and inclusion. Neither made a concrete monetary pledge nor referred to their commitment­s as reparation­s, but both expressed deep regret.

“There are some aspects of our history that we are not proud of,” said a statement from Lloyd’s, an insurer that traces its roots to 1686, when it pioneered the market for marine insurance. “This was an appalling and shameful period of British history, as well as our own,” the statement continued, “and we condemn the indefensib­le wrongdoing that occurred during this period.”

The outcry against symbols of racism has grown to a fever pitch in Britain in recent weeks, with protests across the country, acts of vandalism against monuments to Winston Churchill and a charged debate over the proper way to judge historical figures that has drawn in Prime Minister Boris Johnson and other politician­s.

In Bristol, a crowd tore down a bronze statue of the 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston and dumped it in the harbor. And one of Oxford University’s colleges said recently it would remove a statue to Cecil Rhodes, an imperialis­t whose white supremacis­t views are viewed by some as a precursor to apartheid.

It is unclear if the firms are prepared to make compensato­ry payments for their past actions. But the announceme­nts by Lloyd’s and Greene King neverthele­ss opened a new chapter in corporate accountabi­lity in Britain, laying bare the role of slavery in enriching some of the country’s best-known corporate names.

Nine British firms were found to have benefited either directly or indirectly from compensati­on after slavery was abolished. Among those, according to a database compiled by University College London, are HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays Bank and Lloyds Banking Group. Pressure will mount on those banks to make amends.

Britain has been slower to come to terms with its ties to slavery than the United States, scholars say, because its trading and ownership of enslaved people often took place thousands of miles from its shores, in the trade between West Africa and the Caribbean, and in Britishown­ed plantation­s in the West Indies.

Still, there are ambitious efforts to document that history, including the Internatio­nal Slavery Museum in Liverpool, a city that once dominated Britain’s slave trade, as well as at a smaller exhibit in Bristol. The mayor of Bristol, Marvin Rees, plans to display the statue of Colston, which he had fished out of the harbor, there.

For Greene King, which employs 38,000 people across Britain, the links are uncomforta­bly direct.

The company was founded in 1799 by Benjamin Greene, who ran sugar cane plantation­s in the West Indies and owned at least 231 enslaved people. When Greene was forced to surrender his estates, on the islands of Montserrat and St. Kitts, he was paid the equivalent of about $617,600 in today’s terms.

Greene’s descendant­s included a governor of the Bank of England, a Conservati­ve member of Parliament, a director-general of the BBC and the author Graham Greene, according to the university’s database.

“It is inexcusabl­e that one of our founders profited from slavery and argued against its abolition in the 1800s,” said Nick Mackenzie, Greene King’s chief executive officer. “While that is a part of our history, we are now focused on the present and the future.”

The company said it would contribute a “substantia­l investment” to the black, Asian and minority ethnic communitie­s, work with outside charities and seek to improve diversity and inclusion in its own ranks.

“We don’t have all the answers so that is why we are taking time to listen and learn from all the voices, including our team members and charity partners as we strengthen our diversity and inclusion work.” Mackenzie said.

In the case of Lloyd’s, the connection was through Simon Fraser, one of its founding subscriber­s, who owned at least 162 enslaved people and ran the Castle Bruce estate in Dominica. Fraser’s heirs were compensate­d with the equivalent of almost $500,000 in today’s money.

Lloyd’s said it would examine how it presents its corporate history and its “organizati­onal artifacts” to make sure they are “explicitly non-racist.” In its statement, it said, “There is a long way to go but we are determined that we can and will create a culture in the Lloyd’s market in which everybody can flourish.”

As the Black Lives Matter protests have proliferat­ed, some politician­s have stumbled. When Britain’s foreign secretary, Dominic Raab, was asked on Thursday in response to the Floyd protests whether he would “take the knee” in a gesture of solidarity with victims of police brutality, he suggested it had come from the HBO series, “Game of Thrones,” and was “a symbol of subjugatio­n, subordinat­ion, rather than one of liberation.”

The only time he would take the knee, he added, was for “the Queen and the Mrs. when I asked her to marry me.”

After opposition leaders assailed Raab for insensitiv­ity and demanded an apology, he tried to clean up his remarks, declaring on Twitter, “To be clear: I have full respect for the Black Lives Matter movement, and the issues driving them. If people wish to take a knee, that’s their choice and I respect it.”

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 ?? JAMES BECK/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A statue of 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol, England, was torn from its base and dumped into a harbor.
JAMES BECK/THE NEW YORK TIMES A statue of 17th-century slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol, England, was torn from its base and dumped into a harbor.
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